The Brennan Center submitted a letter to the Wisconsin legislature raising concerns about political contribution disclosure changes contained in Senate Bill 292 and Assembly Bill 387, and urging the legislators to reject the bills.

On October 26, 2015, the Brennan Center filed a comment once again urging the Federal Election Commission to close loopholes in its disclosure and coordination regulations, and to take other necessary steps to address recent Supreme Court decisions, including 'Citizens United.'

Expanding Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) efforts in New York City would threaten civil liberties and inappropriately stigmatize and alienate Muslim communities, the Brennan Center argued in a letter to Mayor Bill de Blasio.

The Brennan Center submitted comment to the U.S. Census Bureau urging it to update the usual residence rule for the 2020 Census so that all incarcerated persons are counted at their home address rather than the prison facility where they are located on Census Day.

Creating a new office for Countering Violent Extremism within the Department of Homeland Security will do little to reduce terrorism and could harm national security efforts, the Brennan Center and others argued in a letter to House leadership.

In light of recent criminal charges against another prominent political leader, New Yorkers need assurances that their elected leaders are appropriately and comprehensively responding to the ongoing ethics scandals in Albany.

On May 7, 2015, LNS Senior Counsel Rachel Levinson-Waldman testified before the Committee on the Judiciary of the Council of the District of Columbia, raising important questions about the policy governing the Metropolitan Police Department’s body-worn camera pilot program.